Ranjana script

The Ranjana script, which is also known as Kutila or Lantsa,
is one of the many alphabets derived from the Brahmi
script. It developed during the 11th century AD and was used until the mid-20th
century in India and Nepal by the Newari people to write the Newari language.

Tibetans use this script, which they call Lantsa, for writing
the Sanskrit titles of books which have been translated from Sanskrit to
Tibetan, and for decoration in temples and mandalas. There are also a few
texts printed with alternating lines in Sanskrit in the Lantsa
script followed by a Tibetan translation. There were many original Sanskrit
manuscripts written in Lantsa preserved in the old monasteries
of Tibet but most of these were destroyed following the Chinese take-over.

In addition, the Ranjana script is/was used mainly for decoration by
Buddhists in China, Mongolia and Japan.

Notable features

Type of writing system: syllabic alphabet - each letter has an inherent vowel
[a]. Other vowels can be indicated using a separate letters or diacritics.

Direction of writing: left to right in horizontal lines.

Used to write:

Nepal Bhasa (नेपाल भाषा / Newah Bhaye / Newari),
a member of the Tibeto-Burman group of Sino-Tibetan languages spoken in Nepal,
India, especially in Sikkim and West Bengal, and Bhutan by about 800,000 people.

As well as the Ranjana script, Nepal Bhasa has been written with the Brahmi,
Gupta, Prachalit, Bhujimol and Devanagari script.